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INTRODUCTION TO THE UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM |
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The
program in English fosters the ability to read critically and
imaginatively—to appreciate the power of language to shape thought and
represent the world—to be sensitive to the ways in which literature is
created and achieves its effects.
The major has several points of departure, grounding the teaching of
critical reading in focused attention to the most significant works of
English literature, in the study of the historical and social
conditions surrounding literary production and reception, and in
theoretical reflection on the process of writing and reading and the
nature of the literary work.
The courses the department offers draw on a broad range of
methodologies and theoretical approaches, from the formalist to the
political to the psychoanalytical (to mention just a few). Ranging from
the medieval period to the 21st century, we teach major authors
alongside popular culture, traditional literary genres alongside verbal
forms that cut across media, canonical British literature alongside
postcolonial, global, and trans-Atlantic literatures.
The major points to three organizing principles for the study of
literature—history, genre, and geography—requiring students not only to
take a wide variety of courses but also to arrange their thinking about
literature on these very different grids. The major gives them broad
exposure to the study of the past, an understanding of the range of
forms that can shape literary meaning, and an encounter with the
various geographical landscapes against which literature in English has
been produced.
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